rti-for-government-schools
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Notice on DPDP Rules, 2025. The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 were notified on 14 November 2025. With this notification, Section 44(3) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 became operational and amended Section 8(1)(j) of the Right to Information Act, 2005. The earlier public interest override within clause (j) stands removed. Public interest reasoning now operates through Section 8(2) of the RTI Act, which has not been amended. This page has been reviewed in the light of this change. For the full practitioner note, see DPDP Rules, 2025: The amendment to Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act.

· 2026/04/19 05:02 · 0 Comments

How Parents Can Use RTI to Improve Government School Facilities and Teaching Quality

RTI for government schools — RTI Wiki

In one line. A government school runs on public money and a teaching staff whose attendance and qualifications are entered in a register. Under the RTI Act, any parent — or any concerned citizen — can access those registers, the mid-day meal accounts, the SMC minutes, and the infrastructure budget.

What that means in practice.

  • The school's internal registers stop being a private world.
  • The headmaster records his decisions knowing that parents can ask for them.
  • The state education department takes note — and often course-corrects.

Did you know? Under Section 21 of the Right to Education Act, 2009, every government school is required to constitute a School Management Committee (SMC) with at least 50% parent members. The SMC minutes are public records — disclosable under RTI within 30 days.

What is the problem?

Government schools in India range from excellent to neglected. The difference is rarely the children or the teachers — it is supervision. When parents are informed, when the BEO is watched, when funds are accounted for, schools thrive. When no one asks, they drift.

RTI converts parental interest into documented oversight. It is a quiet, constructive tool — not a weapon, but a lamp.

What information can you ask under RTI?

  • Teacher attendance register for a specified month.
  • List of sanctioned and vacant posts in the school.
  • Teacher qualifications and subject allocation.
  • Mid-day meal register and food-grain receipt.
  • Annual Work Plan and Budget (AWP&B) of the school.
  • Samagra Shiksha funds released and spent.
  • SMC / SDMC minutes.
  • School infrastructure status — toilets, drinking water, library, labs.
  • Textbook and uniform distribution records.
  • Enrolment and dropout data.
  • Last three inspection reports by the BEO / CRC.

When to use RTI

  • Teacher absenteeism is chronic.
  • Mid-day meals are skipped, or of poor quality.
  • Toilets are broken, water is unsafe.
  • Textbooks are late or missing.
  • The SMC is not meeting regularly.
  • Funds have been released but classrooms are not whitewashed.
  • A teacher-transfer has left your child without a subject teacher for months.

Step-by-step filing

Online

  • Via your state RTI portal. Select Department of School Education → [district / block office].
  • For KVS, NVS, Sainik Schools — via rtionline.gov.in → Ministry of Education.

Offline

  • Address: Public Information Officer, Office of the Block Education Officer (BEO) / District Education Officer (DEO) / School Headmaster.
  • Fee: Rs. 10 by IPO. Free for BPL.
  • Send by Speed Post.

Sample RTI application

To,
The Public Information Officer,
Office of the Block Education Officer,
[Block Name], District [District], [State]

(Copy to: The Headmaster, Government [Primary / Upper Primary / Secondary] School, [Village / Ward])

Subject: Application under the Right to Information Act, 2005, regarding facilities, staff, and funds at Government [school name], [location].

Sir/Madam,

I, [Full Name], citizen of India and resident of [Full Address], parent / guardian of student [Student Name, Class] (or citizen concerned with the education of children in my neighbourhood), submit the following request:

School name: ________
UDISE Code (if known): ________
Ward / Village: ________
Financial year of information sought: [YYYY-YY]

Please provide:

1. Teacher attendance register, month-wise, for the period [YYYY-MM to YYYY-MM], with total working days and days present for each teacher.

2. List of teacher posts sanctioned and vacant, subject-wise, with dates of last appointments / transfers.

3. Qualifications of each teacher currently posted — graduation, teacher training, subject.

4. Mid-day meal register for the period, including number of children served, food-grain received, and cooking cost reimbursement.

5. Annual Work Plan and Budget (AWP&B) of the school and Samagra Shiksha funds released, with expenditure statement.

6. Last three SMC meeting minutes — agenda, attendance, decisions.

7. Status of school infrastructure — toilets (number and condition), drinking water source, library, computer lab, playground.

8. Last three inspection reports by the CRC, BRC, or BEO, with observations and compliance taken.

9. Textbook and uniform distribution records for the current academic year.

10. Enrolment (class-wise), attendance (yearly average), and dropout figures for the last three years.

I enclose Indian Postal Order No. __________ dated __________ for Rs. 10.

I declare that I am an Indian citizen.

Yours faithfully,

[Full Name]
[Signature]
[Date] [Place]

Ten powerful RTI questions for a parent or concerned citizen

  1. Teacher attendance register (month-wise).
  2. Vacancies, subject-wise.
  3. Mid-day meal register.
  4. AWP&B and expenditure statement.
  5. SMC minutes.
  6. Infrastructure inventory.
  7. Inspection reports.
  8. Textbook and uniform distribution.
  9. Enrolment and dropout data.
  10. Transfer / posting orders.

What happens after filing

  • Day 0–10: CPIO (usually the BEO's record clerk or the headmaster) receives the application and pulls registers.
  • Day 10–30: In many cases, simply the fact that an RTI has arrived triggers a CRC visit, a painting of toilets, or an SMC meeting.
  • Day 30: Formal reply mandatory.
  • Day 31+: First Appeal to the DEO.
  • Day 60+: Second Appeal to SIC.

Ethical use — what RTI is **not** for

  • Not a tool to harass individual teachers. Ask about attendance aggregates, not personal conduct.
  • Not a substitute for PTA conversations. Use RTI after the SMC has tried.
  • Not a weapon to settle local political scores.
  • Not a way to obtain children's personal data of other students — that is protected under Section 8(1)(j).

Used responsibly, RTI is an excellent complement to a functioning school — it makes the good teacher's work visible, protects the honest headmaster, and puts neglect on public record.

Common mistakes

  • Filing without the UDISE code. It helps the BEO trace the school quickly.
  • Asking for the children's names / marks — that is blocked under Section 8(1)(j).
  • Not copying the headmaster. A courtesy copy speeds up acknowledgement.
  • Escalating prematurely. Wait the 30 days.

Pro tips

  • Organise a Parents' RTI group. One application per quarter covering different schools. Builds a district-level picture.
  • Share the replies with the SMC. They become the agenda for the next meeting.
  • If replies reveal good performance, celebrate the teacher. RTI is not only for spotlighting failures.
  • Use the Shala Siddhi national school-evaluation framework alongside RTI.

FAQs

Q1. Can parents of private-school children file RTI?
Not for the private school itself (unless it receives government grant). But you can RTI the CBSE / state board / affiliating body for approval conditions, inspection reports, and disclosure norms.

Q2. Can I ask for a teacher's salary?
Yes, broadly. Salary drawn from the public exchequer is public information, though certain deductions may be protected under Section 8(1)(j). The Girish Ramchandra Deshpande line of cases draws the boundary.

Q3. The school has no PIO. Whom do I address?
Under RTI Rules, every public authority must designate a PIO. If the school has not, the BEO is the default PIO. The RTI will still be valid.

Q4. The HM refused to accept my application.
File by Speed Post with acknowledgement due; that is legal acceptance under Section 6(1). Or file through the state RTI portal.

Q5. Can I RTI private school fees?
Not directly. But state fee-regulatory committees (under state Right to Education Rules) are public authorities. You can RTI them for affidavits submitted by the school.

Conclusion

A government school that knows parents are watching — respectfully, with a file in hand — is a government school that improves. Not because of fear, but because of attention. A teacher's good work becomes visible. A leaking roof gets fixed. A mid-day meal plate becomes honest.

Use RTI as a lamp. The children will benefit.


Last reviewed: 21 April 2026. References verified against the Right to Education Act, 2009, and Samagra Shiksha guidelines.

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